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Big-wave surfer Keala Kennelly sits on her board before the opening ceremony of the 2018 Eddie Aikau Big Wave Invitational.
Big-wave surfer Keala Kennelly sits on her board before the opening ceremony of the 2018 Eddie Aikau Big Wave Invitational. (Photo: Brian Bielmann/AFP/Getty)

For Pro Women Surfers, Equal Pay Isn’t Enough

When Sophie Goldschmidt became the World Surf League's CEO in 2017, improving the women's tour was a priority. Her next challenge is equality for all surfers.

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Big-wave surfer Keala Kennelly sits on her board before the opening ceremony of the 2018 Eddie Aikau Big Wave Invitational.
(Photo: Brian Bielmann/AFP/Getty)

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Early one morning in late March, Sophie Goldschmidt, the 44-year-old CEO of the World Surf League (WSL), settled back into a swivel chair in an empty, glass-walled conference room within the league鈥檚 Santa Monica, California, headquarters. She cradled a cup of tea and reflected on the day听in the spring of 2017听that an unknown recruiter called her about taking professional surfing鈥檚 top position. At the time, the only thing Goldschmidt knew about the sport was what her boyfriend, also a surfer, had told her. 鈥淚鈥檇 heard of Kelly Slater and Bethany Hamilton,鈥 she told me. 鈥淭hat was it.鈥

But the job intrigued her, and by that August, she and her boyfriend had traded their comfortable lives in London for Southern California and the wilderness of professional surfing.

In her year and a half on the job, Goldschmidt, who was born in Wimbledon, England, and previously worked as an executive for the NBA, England鈥檚Rugby Football Union, and the 奥辞尘别苍鈥檚 Tennis Association, has overseen some sweeping changes in the sport, none more important than her announcement in听September听that the WSL would pay its women and men athletes equally. The decision, which came as a surprise even to the WSL鈥檚 surfers, made the league the first U.S.-based global sports organization听to offer equal pay听and among the first to do so worldwide.

At the WTA, Goldschmidt had brokered the biggest deal听in the history of women鈥檚 sports up to that point鈥攁n $88 million, six-year contract with Sony Ericsson听to be the WTA鈥檚 title sponsor. Billie Jean King, who听Goldschmidt had gotten to know personally while working at the WTA, is one of her heroes. The deal with听Ericsson, Goldschmidt says, felt inextricable from the strides King began making in the seventies. 鈥淭he progress she made,鈥 Goldschmidt听says, 鈥渓aid the foundation for that.鈥

For the WSL鈥檚 2019 season, the league launcheda sweeping 奥辞尘别苍鈥檚 Initiative. 黑料吃瓜网 the conference room, pinned on pegboards and walls听were colorful printouts of marketing material and motivational catchphrases for employees. One Wave for Everyone听was the guiding theme. But now听there was another pivotal moment on the horizon that would be pushing professional surfing鈥攚hich has long been dominated by men and plagued by sexism鈥攆urther into uncharted territory.

In a few days鈥 time, the 2019 men鈥檚 and women鈥檚 World Tour season would begin on Australia鈥檚 Gold Coast. Before the competitions started, there would be an awards gala where the previous year鈥檚 world champions would be officially honored. Among those to be crowned was Keala Kennelly, who had clinched the title for the newly created 奥辞尘别苍鈥檚 Big Wave Tour. Kennelly, who is openly gay, had been pushing Goldschmidt and the WSL to clearly state that homosexual athletes were welcome听in professional surfing.

Kennelly had some reason to be worried. On March 6, Goldschmidt had sent an e-mail to the tour鈥檚 women athletes听outlining the WSL鈥檚 2019 奥辞尘别苍鈥檚 Initiative.听鈥淭he ocean doesn鈥檛 care who you are or where you came from, the color of your skin, your gender, or about other personal choices you make,鈥 she wrote. That Goldschmidt had not written gay听or LGBTQ,听instead chosing听the ambiguous phrase 鈥渙ther personal choices,鈥 frustrated Kennelly. 鈥淏eing gay is not a choice,鈥 Kennelly says.听Having to pretend to be straight to preserve your sponsors and standing in professional surfing, as Kennelly once felt she had to do, is听a choice. 鈥淚鈥檓 hoping it鈥檚 just an oversight,鈥 she said. 鈥淏ut it would be nice if they actually came out and said gay听and LGBTQ.鈥澨


On the surface, the WSL鈥檚 announcement of equal pay in September seemed as flawless as it was groundbreaking. But the news was followed by a damaging, in the February issue of The New York Times Magazine, in which a group of women big-wave surfers, including Kennelly, outlined pro surfing鈥檚 longstanding, systemic sexism and homophobia听and accused Goldschmidt and the WSL of proliferating these biases.

The group, called the (CEWS) and cofounded by Kennelly and fellow big-wave surfers Paige Alms, Andrea Moller, and Bianca Valenti, along with Karen Tynan, a labor lawyer, and Sabrina Brennan, a commissioner with California鈥檚 San Mateo County Harbor District, had accused Goldschmidt and the WSL of being resistant to equal pay. The group asserted that听if it hadn鈥檛 been for its听public pressure for equity in pro surfing, in the summer of 2018, Goldschmidt would never have announced equal pay when she did.听

Now听there was another pivotal moment on the horizon that would be pushing professional surfing鈥攚hich has forever been dominated by men and plagued by sexism and homophobia鈥攆urther into uncharted听territory.

鈥淓qual prize money was part of a long-term strategy and a natural next step for the WSL, given everything that we鈥檇 done over recent years,鈥澨鼼oldschmidt says. 鈥淲e had plans to implement it for events beginning in 2019,听and wanted to ensure it was announced at a time that made sense for the WSL, and were not going to be pressured into doing it due to other agendas.鈥

鈥淚 do believe that the WSL probably had long-term plans to do equal pay at some point,鈥 Kennelly told me. 鈥淏ut us forming CEWS just applied some pressure and made it happen a little quicker.鈥

Exactly how much听the pressure from CEWS factored into the league鈥檚 decision to announce equal pay when it听did remains, for now, a听secret. Nevertheless, Goldschmidt鈥檚 assertion that the WSL鈥檚 decision to award equal prize money was part of a long-term strategy is, as Kennelly pointed out, not wrong. 听

In 2013, after the WSL took over pro surfing鈥檚 governing-body predecessor, the Association of Surfing Professionals (ASP), the women鈥檚 tour was on life support. Compared to the men鈥檚 11 events, the women鈥檚 had been reduced to eight鈥攁n improvement from 2011, which had seven. The total prize purse per event for the women was $110,000. For the men, it was $425,000. The women鈥檚 winner received $15,000, while the men鈥檚 winner received $75,000.听A cringeworthy听example of where professional surfing culture stood in terms of gendered tone deafness was the , which featured cutaways and commercial breaks with the voice-over of a woman moaning sexually.

The WSL鈥檚 new management immediately began working to improve the women鈥檚 tour. Jessi Miley-Dyer,听the women鈥檚 tour commissioner, was听tasked with bringing the tour up to ten events and boosting the prize money. Still, in 2014,听the men鈥檚 winner at each event got听a $100,000 check, while the women鈥檚 winner received $60,000. Now, in 2019, the men鈥檚 and women鈥檚 event champions each get $100,000. Second-place finishers each get听$55,000;听third, $30,000;听and so on down the line.

鈥淭o have a new management and ownership team who said, 鈥極f course we鈥檙e going to do this for you鈥欌攚e had never had that before,鈥澨齅iley-Dyer said.


As Goldschmidt and I spoke in Santa Monica, the WSL鈥檚 offices gradually began to fill up. The waves happened to be good that morning, so many of the league鈥檚 100 or so employees were running late. The WSL had recently gone on a hiring spree鈥攊ts听benefactor, Dirk Ziff, a publishing heir, and his wife, Natasha, were doubling down on their goal of bringing surfing into the mainstream.

I asked Goldscmidt if the league was ready financially for the shift to equal pay. 鈥淲e鈥檙e making an investment,鈥 she said. 鈥淚 think听sometimes听it鈥檚 been lost on people that for brands and certain organizations, pay equity听has to be affordable for it to be sustainable, and you need the investment to be able to do it.鈥 I wondered if it wasn鈥檛 lack of investment in the first place that has caused women鈥檚 sports to be perceived by some leagues, companies, and fans to be inferior to men鈥檚. 鈥淚 think that鈥檚 a strong argument,鈥 she said. 鈥淚鈥檓 very aware that there are huge discrepancies. Progress has been made, but my God, it鈥檚 been slow in a lot of areas.鈥

For the WSL, Kennelly鈥檚 impending world championship also offered a second chance. 鈥淚t鈥檚 time for surfing to come out,鈥 Schumacher told me. 鈥淎nd for professional surfing to be the lead in this conversation.鈥

For Cori Schumacher, a former three-time ASP World Tour longboard champion, the progress has come too late. Like Kennelly, Schumacher is gay and has long been critical of pro surfing and the surf industry for their homophobia and disinterest in paying women fairly听yet their insistence on advertising them as sexual objects.听

In 2008, Schumacher married her long-time partner and two years later won her second world title, becoming surfing鈥檚 first openly gay world champion, but the ASP barely acknowledged her. 鈥淚 never received an invitation to go pick up my trophy at the awards gala听in Australia along with every other world champion that year,鈥 she told me. 鈥淚t was never acknowledged, and I never received my trophy.鈥 (Goldschmidt says she wasn鈥檛 aware of the circumstances behind Schumacher听never receiving her trophy, but, she assured me, 鈥渢he WSL will make sure she gets one.鈥)听She walked away from professional surfing and entered politics as a city councilwoman in San Diego. Today听she鈥檚 behind a听proposal听in the California legislature, , which would require equal prize money for women and men at any sporting event on state-owned land.

Kennelly, who competed on the women鈥檚 tour between 1998 and 2007, described to me a similar experience to Schumacher鈥檚. 鈥淲hen I first came on tour, I immediately saw how the ASP, how the other athletes, how the industry as a whole听looked at athletes who they presumed to be gay,鈥 she told me. 鈥淧eople talked about lesbians in such a negative way, and since I wanted to fit in and not draw attention to myself or ever have people question me, I would just jump on the bandwagon and do the same.鈥

Like Schumacher, Kennelly walked away from the tour. 鈥淚 couldn鈥檛 deal with living a double life anymore,鈥 she said. 鈥淚 was lonely, I was depressed, I was suicidal at points. Winning a world title was my dream ever since I was a little kid, and when I left the tour, I felt like I鈥檇 completely failed at my dream.鈥澨齀n 2016, Kennelly was given a second chance. That year, the WSL created the 奥辞尘别苍鈥檚 Big Wave Tour. Coupled with equal prize money, Kennelly could finally have the opportunity to make a living off surfing.

For the WSL, Kennelly鈥檚 impending world championship also offered a second chance. 鈥淚t鈥檚 time for surfing to come out,鈥 Schumacher told me. 鈥淎nd for professional surfing to be the lead in this conversation.鈥澨

At the awards gala on March 20, Kennelly stood at the podium, with the world-title trophy sitting next to her. She told a story about how, when she was 25 and had just fallen short of winning a world title, she鈥檇 thought her life was over. 鈥淚 was hiding in the closet, soaked in shame, living in fear, and I hated myself, because I didn鈥檛 think you could be world champion and gay at the same time.鈥 Now, she continued, 鈥淚 get to be proud of who I am, and I get to love myself exactly as I am, not as people would want me to be. And it鈥檚 my hope that I鈥檓 going to inspire other LGBTQ athletes that are suffering in silence to live your truth.鈥

Unfortunately, no one else who took the听stage that night had been as explicit as Kennelly. But the next day, the WSL published various clips of the awards ceremony on its website, and only one of the speeches:听鈥溾 read the headline. I asked Goldschmidt to clarify her and the WSL鈥檚 position on LGBTQ surfers. The league鈥檚 Every Wave for Everyonecampaign, she wrote to me in an e-mail, 鈥渋s literally about what it says. Our initial focus has been around getting more women and girls engaged in surfing, as part of our overall strategy to further elevate women鈥檚 surfing. But we鈥檙e encouraging everyone to get involved; any gender, nationality, sexual orientation, or religion.鈥

A few days later, I spoke with Kennelly.听鈥淢y feeling is, between Sophie and especially Jessi, that they鈥檙e really trying to end the discrimination against LGBTQ athletes and really change things on the WSL, so I鈥檓 trying to support them in that,鈥 she said. 鈥淏aby steps, you know.鈥

Lead Photo: Brian Bielmann/AFP/Getty

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